While the idea of a Shared Responsibility Model is conceptually understood, organizations taking advantage of the transformative power of public cloud platforms continue to come short practically, of the implementation of basic security controls, giving hackers a one-way ticket to their critical assets and data.

We understand that vulnerability detection is time critical and can impact how vulnerabilities are managed. To improve zero-day detection, organizations can use a vulnerability management solution to improve the time from detection to fixing a critical vulnerability by utilizing specialist intelligence and tools.

A Continuous Adaptive Risk and Trust Assessment (CARTA) approach to your security posture may not be a new thing, Gartner formalized the idea two years ago at its 2017 security summit, but neither is it an advisable one: it’s absolutely essential for organizations to adopt agile security

Penetration testing, or pen tests, can be a confusing subject and the costs can sometimes spiral beyond what you originally budgeted for without adding value. So, is application pen testing an effective way of keeping your critical applications protected or should you look at exploring other options?

There are security experts who insist penetration testing is essential for application security, and you leave yourself open to BIG risks if you don’t do it regularly. However, not knowing the entire end to end process can be a major stumbling block to getting the best value and, crucially, could have a big impact on your bottom line and overall business security.

There can be no doubting that the cloud is no longer the future but rather the present for an ever-increasing number of organizations. Driven by factors such as digital transformation, operational efficiency, agility and cost savings, the cloud has proved to be something of a business no-brainer.

For the increasingly complex cloud migration across IaaS, PaaS and SaaS, Gartner came up with 3 different markets for cloud security assessment solutions, which leads to many questions about their differences and use cases to protect public cloud services.

Cybersecurity is plagued by a surplus of buzzwords, but occasionally there is one which really is worth investigating further; zero-trust definitely falls into this latter category. So, just what is a zero-trust strategy and how do you implement one effectively in your organization?

When performing a penetration test, there is usually something to be found and reported on. Every once in a while, there’s a client with such great security posture that there are simply no major issues in their web application. When this happens, it can mean only one thing: we need to go deeper!